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Moral Licensing: How Doing Good Gives People Permission to Be Worse

May 4, 2026·12 min
Episode Description from the Publisher

Moral Licensing: Why Doing Good Can Make Us Behave WorseHost Leslie Poston explains the phenomenon of moral licensing: after people do something that affirms their identity as a good person, the brain registers progress toward a moral goal, reducing self-regulatory effort and making later unethical choices more likely, sometimes in unrelated domains. Using a fitness “daily budget” analogy, the episode describes evidence from environmental psychology (green purchases followed by increased lying and cheating), research on racial bias (publicly demonstrating egalitarian credentials followed by more biased choices), activism (low-cost visible actions reducing motivation for harder follow-through), and organizational contexts (leaders with strong ethical self-identities engaging in minor violations because identity buffers self-concept). Poston emphasizes the effect is unconscious, doesn’t require bad intentions, and calls for attention to the misleading feeling of having “done your part.”00:00 Welcome and Topic Setup00:40 What Is Moral Licensing01:34 Virtue as a Budget02:46 Green Choices Backfire04:53 Licensing and Racial Bias06:58 Activism and Workplace Ethics08:28 Why the Brain Does It10:44 Spotting It in Yourself11:51 Wrap Up and Sign Off ★ Support this podcast ★

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